
UK timber and panel import volumes were 0.6% higher in Q1 2025
than they were in 2024, reaching 2.26 million m3, according to
the latest Timber Development UK figures.
Timber and panel import volumes were 0.6% higher in Q1 2025 than
they were in 2024, reaching 2.26 million m3, according to the
latest Timber Development UK figures.
The figures represent the first Q1 growth on the previous year
the sector has seen since 2021.
The start of the year was described by TDUK as “challenging”,
with volumes falling 1% in January 2025, and 9% in February, but
a 13% increase in volumes in March 2025 resulted in cumulative
growth for the quarter as a whole.
Strong Q1 growth in volumes were realised in OSB, Plywood and
engineered wood products Softwood imports also grew by nearly
2%. The reduction in MDF volumes seen in Q1 2025 is being
measured against a strong performance in Q1 2024.
Sawn and planed pine import volumes increased strongly in the
early months of 2025, with pine volumes 32% higher in Q1 2025
than in Q1 2024 – an increase of more than 95,000m3. Most of
this increase came Sweden, but good import growth was also
recorded from Norway, Germany, the Netherlands, and Estonia.
The average prices of imported pine also rose by 4% in Q1 2025.
Meanwhile, whitewood import volumes were 10% lower.
Total softwood import values rose by 12% year-on-year, supported
by a 2% increase in volume and a 10% rise in average prices to
£268/m³. Redwood values soared by 37% and mixed species by 24%,
while whitewood values remained flat.
Hardwood import volumes declined by 2.8%, though key suppliers
like the USA (+8%) and France (+4%) expanded their shipments.
Tropical hardwoods grew nearly 3% in volume, led by Cameroon
(+17%) and the DRC (+58%). In contrast, temperate hardwood
volumes fell by 4%.
Plywood imports were mixed; hardwood plywood volumes edged up
1.1%, led by China and Malaysia, though values fell 1% due to
lower prices. Softwood plywood values surged by 34% on the back
of a 25% rise in volume and a 7% price increase, with Brazil
supplying 80% of UK imports.
TDUK said overall, Q1 2025 exceeded the sector’s low
expectations, with stronger-than-expected volumes and a clear
upward movement in pricing, especially across softwood and
softwood plywood.
“While challenges remain across the construction landscape, it’s
encouraging to see import growth and forecasts pointing to
improvements in the housing and RMI sectors – both key markets
for timber,” said TDUK Head of Technical and Trade, Nick Boulton.
“After a difficult few years, signs of recovery in new housing
and the hope of a continued momentum in RMI give cause for
cautious optimism but we fear may not come soon enough for some
within the sector.”
Source: TDUK